Container with complementary sawtooth features on lid and basket to facilitate opening

ABSTRACT

A container for holding goods comprises a basket having a base and a sidewall, a lid mateable with the basket, a first sawtooth structure formed within the sidewall and a second sawtooth structure formed within the lid and substantially mirroring the first sawtooth structure when the lid is mated with the basket.

CLAIM OF PRIORITY

This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/260,279, entitled “CONTAINER WITH COMPLEMENTARY SAWTOOTH FEATURES ON LID AND BASKET TO FACILITATE OPENING,” by Randall Glenn Strange, et al., filed on Nov. 11, 2009.

TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates generally to packaging, and more particularly to packaging for fragile and/or perishable goods.

BACKGROUND

Plastic berry baskets are ubiquitous in grocery stores and produce markets and can be found by consumers in a variety of shapes and sizes. For example, raspberries and blackberries and the like are sold in clear polyethylene terephthalate (PETE) clamshell containers holding anywhere from a half-pint to a quart or more of fruit. Baskets are commonly designed for consumer level use. It is therefore desirable for such baskets to be improved to benefit a consumer's experience using accessing, storing, or otherwise using such baskets.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of a container in accordance with the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a close-up view of a portion of the container of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3A is an end view of the container of FIG. 1 with lid closed.

FIG. 3B is an end view of the container of FIG. 1 with lid open.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Referring to FIGS. 1-3B, an embodiment of a container 100 in accordance with the present invention is shown. The container 100 comprises a basket 102 defined at least partially by a base 108 and a sidewall 106 extending from the base 108 to a flange 130. As shown, the base 108 has a generally rectangular footprint across the plane on which it rests. The sidewall 106 extending from the base 108 consequently has four faces. Alternatively, in other embodiments the footprint of the base 108 can be some other shape, such as square or triangular for example.

The base 108 is generally flat, but in other embodiments the base can be slightly concave across the length of the container or alternatively can have some other shape relative to a plane on which the basket can rest, depending on a desired contact surface area, a desired flow of air and/or liquids along the base, etc. Optionally the base can be corrugated to include ridges that can serve on or more functions. For example, ridges can improve structural rigidity of the base; the ridges can provide channels for draining fluids and/or holding contents above fluids. Ridges can also function as registration features that are mateable with complementary features of a lid. Optionally the base can include one or more perforations, the one or more perforations permitting drainage, ventilation, ornamentation, or some other purpose. As shown, the body 204 includes perforations that begin at the base 108 and extend at least partially up along the sidewall 106.

As shown in FIGS. 3A and 3B, the sidewall 106 includes a compound draft from the flange 134 to the base 108. The draft is compound because a portion 136 of the draft connected with the base 108 increases in angle. One or both angles of the compound draft can be varied to suit manufacturing or to selectively adjust a volume of the basket. A sharper draft decreases basket volume, but can aid in manufacturing by easing ejection of the body from a mold. In other embodiments, the sidewall 106 can include a simple draft from the flange to the base. In still other embodiments, the sidewall 106 need not include a draft from the flange to the base, or can include a compound draft including more than two angles. In still further embodiments, one face of the sidewall 106 can include no draft, or a draft having a different angle when compared with that of another face of the sidewall 106. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate the myriad different shapes including or excluding drafts with which the sidewall 106 extending from the base 108 to the flange 134 can be formed. Embodiments of baskets in accordance with the present invention are intended to be applied to all such shapes without necessary differentiation.

As shown, the faces of the sidewall 106 of the basket 112 meet at corners one or more of which has an arcuate shape extending substantially along the length of the corner from the base 108 to the flange 134 of the basket. Such features are described in more detail in U.S. patent Ser. No. 11/754,166, entitled “BASKET HAVING IMPROVED SIDEWALL STRUCTURE” by Bontrager et al., incorporated herein by reference. The arcuate shape of the one or more corners can provide structural strength to faces of the sidewalls 106 connected with the one or more corners, resisting and or limiting sidewall 106 collapses that can result in damage to goods held within the basket 102. The arcuate shape of the one or more corners 110 can optionally reduce or eliminate a need for ribs or other reinforcing structures integrally formed with one or more of the faces of the sidewall 106, thereby reducing the resulting surface area of the sidewall 106. A reduction of the amount of surface area of the sidewall 106 can reduce the amount of material used to form the basket 102.

The arcuate shape connects one face of the sidewall 106 to an adjacent face of the sidewall 106, supplanting a corner formed by at an intersection of the faces of the sidewall 106. The arcuate shape of the corner can provide rigidity by providing a structural shape that distributes stress across the arc of the structure. Such a shape eliminates a concentration of stress at a corner, thereby improving a response to force applied to the sidewall 106. The arcuate shape of the corner can reduce a cross-sectional area of the basket 102 but can result in a reduction in sidewall thickness and/or surface area of one or more faces of the sidewall 106 to reduce an amount of material used to form the basket 102. A length and width of the sidewall 106, or alternatively the draft of the sidewall 106 can be increased to accommodate a lost volume attributable to the arcuate shape of the one or more corners. The arcuate shape of FIG. 1B further includes no sharp edges, reducing a risk of damage to delicate goods stored in the container 100.

Referring to FIG. 2, the container 100 further includes a pair of finger holes 120 arranged along a portion of the flange 134 opposite a hinge with which the basket 100 is connected. The finger holes 120 allow a finger to be positioned between the lid 104 and the flange 134, easing separation of the lid from the basket 102. As shown, the flange 134 includes two finger holes 120 arranged symmetrically along a portion of the flange 134 that is opposite of a hinge. The finger holes 120 form a smooth indention within the flange 134, allowing easy insertion of a finger of a consumer. By including the finger holes 120, the lid can be secured to the flange 134 such that a required force to separate the lid from the flange 134 is optionally increased over a basket excluding finger holes. Separation can be accomplished by pushing a finger with increasing diameter into a finger hole 120 or inserting a finger and pulling the lid away from the basket 102 while restricting movement of the basket 102, rather than grasping both the lip 130 of the flange 134 (or body 102) and the lid 104 and applying a pulling force. Providing one or more finger holes 120 reduces the frictional properties of the material as a measure of the ease of opening the basket.

The flange 134 further includes a pair of indentations 132 on each of the three faces of the sidewall 106 adjacent or opposite the hinge connecting the lid 104 to the body 102. Protuberances (not shown) extend from inside the lid 104 that complement, and are received in the indentations 132 to resist separation of the lid 104 from the body 102 when the basket 100 is closed. In other embodiments, the flange and lid can include more or fewer complementary structures, and the complementary structures can be swapped so that protuberances extend from the flange and the indentations are present in the lid.

Embodiments of containers 100 in accordance with the present invention further comprise a flange 134 having a sawtooth feature (also referred to herein as a sawtooth structure) 110 along faces of the sidewall 106 adjacent to, and extending from the hinge connecting the lid 104 and basket 102. The sawtooth feature 110 generally resembles three abutting fingers. A sawtooth feature 111 of the lid 104 mirrors the sawtooth feature 110 of the flange 134 so that when the lid 104 is closed and mated with the basket 102 (see FIG. 3A) an opening have a shape resembling a string of beads is formed. The sawtooth features 110, 111 when mated provide a space roughly sized and shaped to receive three fingers of a consumer. As the consumer's fingers are further urged into the container 100, the increasing diameter of the fingers push the complementary sawtooth features 110, 111 apart to open the container 100 and separate the lid 104 from the basket 102. The complementary sawtooth features can alternatively be shaped to accommodate two fingers or four fingers, and alternatively can be included in the flange along the face of the sidewall opposite the hinge, supplanting finger holes 120, for example.

The sidewalls 106 further include a first set of de-nesting features 112, each feature formed at an arcuate corner. As shown, the de-nesting feature 112 is a ledge interrupting the sidewall along the arcuate corner as the sidewall approaches the flange 134. The de-nesting features 112 allow multiple containers 100 nested within each other (i.e., with baskets received within baskets) to be separated with relative ease. As shown, when multiple containers 100 are nested within each other, the ledges rest on each other. A second set of de-nesting features 116 is shown with pairs of de-nesting features 116 along opposite faces of the sidewall 106. As shown, the de-nesting features 116 of the second set resemble notches. De-nesting features can assist in automated as well as manual handling. As shown, the container 100 further includes registration features (also referred to herein as stacking features) 114 for assisting stacking

In a preferred embodiment, the container can be formed from PETE. However, in other embodiments the container can be formed from any resin known in the art for manufacturing plastic containers. For example, the container can be formed from any of high density polyethylene (HDPE), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), low density polyethylene (LDPE), polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS), and polycarbonate. Alternatively, the container can be formed from a material other than plastic resin, for example the container can be formed from paperboard or a composite material such as fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) or glass-reinforced plastic (GRP).

The foregoing description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in this art. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents. 

1. A container for holding goods comprising: a basket having a base and a sidewall; a lid mateable with the basket; a first sawtooth structure formed within the sidewall; and a second sawtooth structure formed within the lid and substantially mirroring the first sawtooth structure when the lid is mated with the basket; wherein the first sawtooth structure and the second sawtooth structure form an opening that generally resembles abutted fingers of a user.
 2. The container of claim 1, wherein: the sidewall extends from the base to a flange; the lid is mateable with the basket by way of a friction fit with the flange; and the first sawtooth structure is formed within the flange.
 3. The container of claim 2, wherein: the sidewall includes four faces; the first sawtooth structure is formed in the flange of each of two opposite faces of the sidewall; and further comprising: a pair of finger-holes formed in the flange of a third face extending between the two opposite faces of the sidewall.
 4. The container of claim 2, wherein: the sidewall includes four faces; each face meets another face at a corner; and one or more of the corners has an arcuate shape extending substantially along the length of the corner from the base to the flange.
 5. The container of claim 4, further comprising a set of one or more de-nesting features, wherein each of the de-nesting features is formed along the one or more corners having an arcuate shape.
 6. The container of claim 5, wherein each de-nesting feature from the set of one or more de-nesting features is a ledge interrupting the sidewall along the one or more corners between the base and the flange.
 7. The container of claim 2, further comprising a set of de-nesting features, wherein each of the de-nesting features is formed along a face of the sidewall.
 8. The container of claim 7, wherein the set of de-nesting features includes two pairs of notches formed along opposite faces of the sidewall.
 9. The container of claim 2, wherein: the sidewall includes four faces; the lid is hingedly connected with one of the four faces; the flange includes one of an indentation and a protuberance along a face opposite the one of the four faces; and the lid includes the other of the indentation and the protuberance so that when the lid is mated with the basket, the indentation and the protuberance are mated.
 10. A container for holding goods comprising: a basket having a base and a sidewall having four faces, each face meeting another face at a corner; wherein one or more of the corners has an arcuate shape extending substantially along the length of the corner from the base to a flange; a set of one or more de-nesting features, wherein each of the de-nesting features is formed along the one or more corners having an arcuate shape; and a lid mateable with the basket.
 11. The container of claim 10, further comprising: a pair of first sawtooth structures formed in the flange at two opposite faces of the sidewall; a pair of second sawtooth structures formed within the lid and substantially mirroring the pair of first sawtooth structures when the lid is mated with the basket; and wherein the first sawtooth structures and the second sawtooth structures form an opening that generally resembles abutted fingers of a user.
 12. The container of claim 10, further comprising a pair of finger-holes formed in the flange of a third face extending between the two opposite faces of the sidewall.
 13. The container of claim 10, wherein each de-nesting feature from the set of one or more de-nesting features is a ledge interrupting the sidewall along the one or more corners between the base and the flange.
 14. The container of claim 10, further comprising a second set of de-nesting features, wherein each of the de-nesting features from the second set is formed along a face of the sidewall.
 15. The container of claim 14, wherein the second set of de-nesting features includes two pairs of notches formed along opposite faces of the sidewall.
 16. The container of claim 10, wherein: the lid is hingedly connected with one of the four faces; the flange includes one of an indentation and a protuberance along a face opposite the one of the four faces; and the lid includes the other of the indentation and the protuberance so that when the lid is mated with the basket, the indentation and the protuberance are mated.
 17. A container for holding goods comprising: a basket having a base and a sidewall having four faces meeting at four corners; wherein each of the corners has an arcuate shape extending substantially along the length of the corner from the base to a flange; a lid hingedly connected with the basket along one of the faces; a pair of first sawtooth structures formed in the flange at two opposite faces of the sidewall perpendicular to the one of the faces with which the lid is hingedly connected; a pair of second sawtooth structures formed within the lid and substantially mirroring the pair of first sawtooth structures when the lid is mated with the basket; wherein the first sawtooth structures and the second sawtooth structures form an opening that generally resembles abutted fingers of a user; and a pair of finger-holes formed in the flange of a third face opposite the one of the faces with which the lid is hingedly connected;
 18. The container of claim 17, further comprising a set of de-nesting features, wherein each of the de-nesting features is formed along respective corners.
 19. The container of claim 18, wherein each de-nesting feature from the set of de-nesting features is a ledge interrupting the sidewall along the respective corner between the base and the flange.
 20. The container of claim 19, further comprising a second set of de-nesting features including two pairs of notches formed along opposite faces of the sidewall. 